Jim Fox, Special to QMI Agency

With the onset of fall, Ontario’s forests are taking on a vivid palette of colours that are more slowly progressing this year.

The display of vibrant reds, oranges, yellows and golds are putting on an extended show due to ideal weather conditions with lots of sunshine.

This makes the “pockets of colour brighter and showier against the lush green countryside,” say the “colour experts” at Ontario Tourism.

It’s an amazing transformation that occurs in just 14% of the world’s forests, says forestry ecologist Charles Nock of the Universite du Quebec at Montreal.

Forests famous for their colours include southern Ontario and Quebec, Alberta, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, northeastern United States, Japan and Korea.

LET THE SHOW BEGIN

Colour has advanced the most in Algonquin Park at 80-89%, according to Ontario Parks’ midweek update.

It is also vibrant through the higher areas of north Haliburton and Muskoka and in the Parry Sound district with 40% change, Ontario Tourism reports.

Back roads and scenic lookouts offer the best viewing locations while boat cruises continue to operate generally through the Thanksgiving weekend to view the colourful shoreline vistas from a distance.

There are 49 provincial parks reporting on the dominant colours, the percentage of change and the amount of leaf fall.

On-line, there is also a map highlighting the parks by region and tracking the colours along with a link to Ontario Travel’s “Great Fall Drives.”

In Algonquin, sugar and red maples are reaching their peak now, followed in early October by a second colour wave from American beech trees, yellow and white birch, trembling aspen, largetooth aspen, red oak and tamarack.

This is what Ian Shanahan, an Algonquin naturalist, calls the “golden encore.”

Good spots to view the spectacle are the Highway 60 corridor, with the best lookouts being Hardwood, Track and Tower, Centennial Ridges and Lookout and Booth's Rock trails.

In Owen Sound, Bruce and Grey, there are growing “pockets” of red and orange, with about 50% colour change.

“The reds are looking bright and vibrant on the drive near Blue Mountain and Grey Road 1 and throughout the north of the counties,” Ontario Tourism reports.

At Pinery Provincial Park and area, the show is just beginning as in Hamilton/Burlington along with Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, London, Niagara Falls and the Greater Toronto Area.

As well as “Algonquin’s blazing landscape,” bird-watching is a popular fall activity at Ontario parks.

Thousands of birds of prey, such as hawks, eagles and falcons, fly over beach parks along the lower Great Lakes now through late October.

Ontario Tourism’s Fall Colour Progression Report is updated Tuesdays and Fridays through the third week of October at ontariotravel.net